(Source: joelvila, via mightandwonder)
a collection of my daily findings, things that inspire and fascinate me. art. fashion. design. music. photography. color. sounds. dreams. food. anything and everything. a place to think out loud. random thoughts, musings, obsessions, and ideas.
(Source: joelvila, via mightandwonder)
up in real-life
(Source: obeymebitchx, via bitchimfromlansing)
Eyelashes (by Shahriar Erfanian)
(via black-and-white)
cuban.
“I was no longer, if I had ever been, afraid to die: I was now afraid not to die.”
Photo by Brigitte Lacombe
The more things change, the more they stay the same. That’s what you discover in photographer Charles Weever Cushman’s photos of New York City during World War II. While some of the buildings in his photos have since been demolished, venerable haunts like McSorley’s Old Ale House in the East Village still survive — and look much the same.
In 2000, photographer Simone Lueck tagged along with a friend on a two-week trip to Cuba. “The first thing I noticed in Havana,” she writes, “was that the city was dark at night. There were no streetlights, porch lights or living-room lamps. It was pitch black except for the faint colorful glow spilling out of open doors everywhere, and it came from the TVs.”
Click through for more images from Capturing Cuba’s TV Culture : The Picture Show : NPR
(via bbook)